INSTRUMENTS OF KNOWLEDGE 267 



and cataracts, which serve us for many motions ; and 

 likewise engines for multiplying and enforcing of winds 

 to set also on divers motions. 



' We have also a number of artificial wells and foun- 

 tains, made in imitation of the natural sources and 

 baths, as tincted upon vitriol, sulphur, steel, brass, 

 lead, nitre, and other minerals ; and again, we have 

 little wells for infusions of many things, where the 

 waters take the virtue quicker and better than in vessels 

 or basins. And amongst them we have a water, which 

 we call Water of Paradise, being by that we do to it 

 made very sovereign for health and prolongation of life. 



' We have also great and spacious houses, where we 

 imitate and demonstrate meteors — as snow, hail, rain, 

 some artificial rains of bodies, and not of water, thun- 

 ders, lightnings ; also generations of bodies in air — as 

 frogs, flies, and divers others. 



' We have also certain chambers, which we call cham- 

 bers of health, where we qualify the air as we think good 

 and proper for the cure of divers diseases, and preserva- 

 tion of health. 



' We have also fair and large baths, of several mix- 

 tures, for the cure of diseases, and the restoring of man's 

 body from arefaction ; and others for the confirming 

 of it in strength of sinews, vital parts, and the very juice 

 and substance of the body. 



' We have also large and various orchards and gar- 

 dens, wherein we do not so much respect beauty as 

 variety of ground and soil, proper for divers trees and 

 herbs, and some very spacious, where trees and berries 

 are set, whereof we make divers kinds of drinks, besides 

 the vineyards. In these we practise likewise all con- 

 clusions of grafting and inoculating, as well of wild- 

 trees as fruit-trees, which produceth many effects. 

 And we make by art, in the same orchards and gardens, 

 trees and flowers, to come earlier or later than their 

 seasons, and to come up and bear more speedily than 

 by their natural course they do. We make them also 

 by art greater much than their nature ; and their fruit 

 greater and sweeter, and of differing taste, smell, colour. 



